A review by imperfectcj
The English Major by Jim Harrison

3.0

You know? I enjoyed this book. Like There but for the by Ali Smith, this book was about the past and the present, but this one was more about what to do when the past is pulled out from underneath you. Cliff is trying to redefine or perhaps rediscover his foundation when, after 25 years of farming and nearly 40 years of marriage, he finds himself without both his farm and his wife. Cliff clings to his prior identity as an English Major and spends a lot of time reminiscing about the days before his marriage, alternately glorifying those days and poking fun at himself and at English Majors and academic types in general. He claims to hate farming and to have made a naive decision giving up his teaching career to farm full-time in his 30's, but he feels a strong draw back to the land. I suppose in the end what he finds is not so much a radical change, but a sense of balance.

It was interesting to me that I persisted in thinking that Cliff was an "old guy," when in reality, he's almost two years younger than my dad (and I don't think of my dad as an "old guy"). In a lot of ways he's like my dad. Which made the frequent (very frequent) references to sex all the more weird for me.

As a side note, why is it that there seem to be a number of older male writers who write a lot about sex? I'm thinking of Norman Mailer's Ancient Evenings (which I could not stand) and John Updike's Toward the End of Time (which I could stand, and which I read through, but which I didn't really like except in the way that it showed a person very much consumed with his own life and in his own mind and body even through major global turmoil).

At any rate, even though the mentions of sex were rather excessive, I liked The English Major more than either of these other two books.

I wish Harrison had given more detail about the landscape as Cliff took his road trip. He drove all the way across Nebraska and noted none of the rather dramatic changes from the eastern half of the state to the western half, but he did note the weird way that distances become deceptive in Wyoming. And I loved the description of Cliff's walk through San Francisco and his experience of the Pacific Ocean and the redwoods in northern California. It made me nostalgic for the geography of the West Coast (but not for million-dollar condos). I was a little disappointed that Cliff reduced Utah to mentions of polygamous groups and a complaint about the traffic around Salt Lake City, but what are you going to do? He made up for it with his description of Montana. I finished the book with a desire to learn fly fishing.

I like a good road trip book (I like road trips), and Cliff's plan to work his way through the USA puzzle really appeals to my sense of order. Cliff attributes his sense of order to his English Major and his years of farming, with his 50 acre of cherry trees planted in neat rows. Perhaps this means I would do well as a farmer.

To summarize, this book made me feel icky with its frequent sexual references, but it also left me wanting to visit California, become a farmer, take a road trip, defend Utah, and go fly fishing. And maybe to send a copy of the book to my dad.